The Rainbow Trail eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 371 pages of information about The Rainbow Trail.

The Rainbow Trail eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 371 pages of information about The Rainbow Trail.

Shefford leaned in the doorway and looked out.  Beneath him on a roll of blankets sat the Indian girl, silent and motionless.  He wondered what was in her mind, what she would do, how the trader would treat her.  The slope now was a long slant of sheeted moving shadows of sand.  Dusk had gathered in the valley.  The bluffs loomed beyond.  A pale star twinkled above.  Shefford suddenly became aware of the intense nature of the stillness about him.  Yet, as he listened to this silence, he heard an intermittent and immeasurably low moan, a fitful, mournful murmur.  Assuredly it was only the wind.  Nevertheless, it made his blood run cold.  It was a different wind from that which had made music under the eaves of his Illinois home.  This was a lonely, haunting wind, with desert hunger in it, and more which he could not name.  Shefford listened to this spirit-brooding sound while he watched night envelop the valley.  How black, how thick the mantle!  Yet it brought no comforting sense of close-folded protection, of walls of soft sleep, of a home.  Instead there was the feeling of space, of emptiness, of an infinite hall down which a mournful wind swept streams of murmuring sand.

“Well, grub’s about ready,” said Presbrey.

“Got any water?” asked Shefford.

“Sure.  There in the bucket.  It’s rain-water.  I have a tank here.”

Shefford’s sore and blistered face felt better after he had washed off the sand and alkali dust.

“Better not wash your face often while you’re in the desert.  Bad plan,” went on Presbrey, noting how gingerly his visitor had gone about his ablutions.  “Well, come and eat.”

Shefford marked that if the trader did live a lonely life he fared well.  There was more on the table than twice two men could have eaten.  It was the first time in four days that Shefford had sat at a table, and he made up for lost opportunity.

His host’s actions indicated pleasure, yet the strange, hard face never relaxed, never changed.  When the meal was finished Presbrey declined assistance, had a generous thought of the Indian girl, who, he said, could have a place to eat and sleep down-stairs, and then with the skill and despatch of an accomplished housewife cleared the table, after which work he filled a pipe and evidently prepared to listen.

It took only one question for Shefford to find that the trader was starved for news of the outside world; and for an hour Shefford fed that appetite, even as he had been done by.  But when he had talked himself out there seemed indication of Presbrey being more than a good listener.

“How’d you come in?” he asked, presently.

“By Flagstaff—­across the Little Colorado—­and through Moencopie.”

“Did you stop at Moen Ave?”

“No.  What place is that?”

“A missionary lives there.  Did you stop at Tuba?”

“Only long enough to drink and water my horse.  That was a wonderful spring for the desert.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Rainbow Trail from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.